Love Your Pet on Valentine’s Day!!

Each year on Valentine’s Day, the poison control center reports a significant rise in cases of poisoned pets around February 14. Many of these involve pets eating chocolate, greenery, flowers or toys. Do not leave gifts of candy, flowers, and plastic or stuffed toys where your pets can get to them.

Here are a few guidelines to ensure a safe Valentine’s Day for your furry loved one:

Bouquets:

Before sending a floral arrangement to someone you love that may have a pet, ask the florist not to use any plants that might be toxic to dogs or cats. Most Lilies are especially toxic to cats, and other flowers and greenery can be a problem for both dogs and cats. These can include Lilies — Asian Lily, Arum Lily, Bird of Paradise, Lilly of the Valley, Tulips, Amaryllis, Daisies, Chrysanthemums, Baby’s Breath, Bride’s Bonnet, Caladiums, Carnations, Bracken or Brake Fern, Bamboo Palm, Dieffenbachia, Elephant Ears and others).

If you are considering sending a plant that you or a florist are not sure about, you can check at the ASPCA poison control for toxicity.

When you receive a bouquet, make sure to double check for any toxic flowers or greenery. If you are not sure if it’s toxic remove it!

Keep pets away from thorny stemmed flowers. Biting, stepping on or swallowing their sharp, woody spines can be painful and cause infection if a puncture occurs. Learn how to de-thorn your roses or other thorny stemmed flowers and carefully dispose of the thorns.

Chocolate:

Experienced pet lovers know the potentially life-threatening dangers of chocolate. Toxicity varies by type of chocolate. In order of toxicity, the most toxic is baker’s chocolate and even a small amount can be dangerous. Next toxic is dark chocolate or semi-sweet chocolate, and then milk chocolate. All types of chocolate contain the toxic theobromine (a naturally occurring stimulant found in the cocoa bean) in different concentrations. It affects the central nervous system and the heart and has a dose-related toxicity in dogs and cats.

Call your vet or the ASPCA poison control if your pet eats chocolate. They can help determine if the dose is toxic and will ask you for the weight of your pet, the type and amount of chocolate eaten and how long ago it happened.

Remember that overeating any chocolate, food or candy can lead to an inflammation of the pancreas and possible serious GI upset. Often supportive medical care can help an animal avoid distress.

Treats Sweetened with Xylitol:

Even very small amount of Xylitol can be seriously toxic and fatal. Gum, candy and other treats that include this sweetener can result in a sudden and dangerous drop in blood sugar known as hypoglycemia. Sign include sudden depression, loss of coordination, seizures and collapse. Emergency medical attention is required for any animal eating any xylitol.

Alcohol:

Spilled wine, half a glass of champagne or some leftover liquor can be dangerous to your pet. Since animals are smaller than humans, a little bit of alcohol can do a lot of harm, causing vomiting and diarrhea, lack of coordination, central nervous system depression, tremors, difficulty breathing, metabolic disturbances and even coma. Potentially fatal respiratory failure can also occur if a large enough amount is ingested.

Candles

It’s pleasant to set an evening aglow with a candlelight setting; however, do not forget to monitor pets near flames and to put out the fire when no one is in the room. Pawing kittens and nosy pooches can be burned or cause a house fire by knocking over unattended candles as a result of their curiosity.

Stuffed Toys:

Pets can love stuffed animals just as much as human do. Stuffed animals with undigestible stuffing, button noses, eyes, or other chewable, removable or swallow-able parts can cause life-threatening GI blockage or GI upset. Always make sure the stuffed toy is designed for use by your pet and is resistant to becoming torn or broken. Toy stuffing may become a choking hazard or, in some cases, poisonous if ingested.

Gifts:

Ribbons, bows, wrapping paper, cellophane and balloons, if swallowed, can get lodged in your pet’s throat or digestive tract causing your pet to choke or vomit.

Ribbons, bows, and balloons are especially interesting to cats and should be removed promptly.

Patients & Friends

Excerpt from “The Royal Treatment” –

ALLERGIC PETS

An itchy pet may not be a medical emergency, but it is often a mental emergency.

Allergies are a big issue in veterinary medicine. Although a sneeze can be an initial sign of allergy, a more common sigh of allergy is itching. Itchy dogs and cats chew at their skin and feet, scratching, licking, irritating, and even ulcerating skin. Itching is distressing for both pets and owners. It's hard to live or sleep with a per that can't stop scratching. The irritated pet can really weigh on the mind. Not to mention the extreme discomfort the pet is going through.

Not only are people allergic to animals, but animal are allergic to our world, too. I use the analogy of a cup overfilling when I explain allergies to my clients. As long as the cup isn't brimming over with allergens and immune problems, the animal won't show any signs of irritation. However, when the cup runneth over, the itchy signs maketh themselves known.

Note: Some of my clients have been told that their pet is allergic to meat. I believe it is highly unlikely that a carnivore is allergic to meat. Although I know it can be true, it should be the exception, not the rule. More commonly, the culprit is the chemicals in processed meats or poor-quality meats, or the grains and chemicals in the processed food irritate an animal's GI tract, making the intestines a poor border protector. An unhealthy GI tract may allow more antigens into the bloodstream. When a food change alleviates allergies, it is more likely because the food improves the health of the GI tract by providing a good protein content, and fewer grains of chemicals. A healthy GI tract makes all the difference in resolving allergies.

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